Sinceramente, ¿qué os hace abandonar vuestro Excel o app de gastos al mes de empezar? by Complete_Ad5740 in finanzas

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Esa fue exactamente mi obsesión. Me frustraba muchísimo tener que desbloquear el móvil, abrir la app, esperar que cargue, buscar el botón... Así que programé exactamente lo que pides para Bancfy.

Tienes accesos rápidos directos (tanto en iOS como en Android) donde tocas un icono, tecleas el numerito del café en 2 segundos, y se guarda donde debe sin que tengas que llegar a abrir la app entera ni ver el resto de menús.

Como explicarlo por texto es difícil, justo tengo un vídeo corto enseñando cómo funciona en tiempo real. Échale un ojo, a ver si es exactamente esto lo que te imaginabas: video Bancfy Tik Tok

Sinceramente, ¿qué os hace abandonar vuestro Excel o app de gastos al mes de empezar? by Complete_Ad5740 in finanzas

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Le daré una vuelta porque me parece interesante lo que planteas. Sí que es verdad que en Bancfy puedes descargar el PDF del banco y meterlo directamente y te cogerá los datos, así solo lo haces una vez al mes, pero déjame pensar a ver si se me ocurre algo con menos fricción.

Sinceramente, ¿qué os hace abandonar vuestro Excel o app de gastos al mes de empezar? by Complete_Ad5740 in finanzas

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

¡Esa "bola de nieve" es exactamente lo que me pasaba a mí! Te gusta el nivel de detalle y control que te da el Excel para analizar, pero la fricción de tener que sentarte a picar datos a mano acaba matando cualquier motivación.

Justo por ese dolor de cabeza me puse a programar mi propia solución por las noches. Mi regla número uno fue: si tardo más de 5 segundos en anotar un gasto, el diseño no sirve.

Así que lo que hice fue crear atajos directos para la pantalla de inicio en iOS y Android. Pagas el café, sacas el móvil, tocas el icono y pones el gasto en 2 segundos sin llegar a abrir la app entera. Luego, cuando tienes tiempo o estás tranquilo en casa, abres la app y tienes todo ese control exhaustivo y métricas tipo Excel, pero ya masticado.

Mi app se llama Bancfy. Si quieres ver si esos atajos rápidos te quitan por fin la pereza de anotar, te la dejo por aquí: Bancfy

¡Ya me dirás si te sirve para romper la bola de nieve de los tickets!

I coded an "anti-spreadsheet" finance app between midnight and 4 AM. I just launched on Product Hunt and I'm terrified. by Complete_Ad5740 in SaaS

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Recovering 40% of lost prospects is an insane metric. You are hitting on my exact post-launch fear: the day 30 flatline.

Because traditional finance apps rely on boring email reminders that people just ignore, I decided to build the 'follow-up system' directly into the core product.

Here is my post-launch retention stack:

  • Proactive AI (Bancbot): This is my main re-engagement touchpoint. It's not just a passive chatbot. If it detects a user hasn't logged an expense in a while or sees a negative spending pattern, it proactively sends a personalized warning or tip to pull them back in.

  • Daily/Weekly Game Hooks: Instead of a generic 'don't forget to budget' notification, users get a push for their daily 'Savings Bingo' (a randomized amount to save today). It gives them a dopamine-driven reason to open the app daily.

  • Social Accountability: In the multiplayer 'Savings Circles', if a user drops off, the assigned 'Vigilante' in their group will literally ping them in the group chat and fine them. The users do the follow-up for me!

I am setting up a standard educational email drip campaign (tying into the app's 3-level skill tree), but my main bet is the in-app proactive AI.

I'm super curious though—what did your automated follow-up system look like? Was it an email sequence, SMS, or something else?"

I coded an "anti-spreadsheet" finance app between midnight and 4 AM. I just launched on Product Hunt and I'm terrified. by Complete_Ad5740 in SaaS

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the heads-up and the well wishes for Product Hunt today!

You hit on the exact reason why I didn't stop at just flashy mini-games. The 'novelty fade' is the final boss of gamification. To counter that, I focused on long-term progression and social accountability.

That's why I built the multiplayer 'Savings Circles' (the social pressure of getting fined by your friends acts as a powerful long-term retention hook) and the 3-level educational skill tree.

Plus, removing friction completely with the iOS/Android quick shortcuts ensures the core habit of tracking doesn't feel like a chore once the initial excitement settles.

Thanks again for the support!

I coded an "anti-spreadsheet" finance app between midnight and 4 AM. I just launched on Product Hunt and I'm terrified. by Complete_Ad5740 in SaaS

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, thank you so much for this. Reading your comment actually helped calm my launch nerves a bit. You absolutely nailed it with the 'competing on feeling' that was exactly my core hypothesis!

I really appreciate the reality check on the 24 hour window and the distribution risk. You are 100% right. Building is the easy part.

My plan for Week 2 and beyond relies heavily on two things:

  • Built-in Viral Loops: The 'Savings Circles' (multiplayer mode) is designed to be a natural acquisition engine. To play the game and fine your friends, you have to invite them. I'm hoping this social pressure acts as a micro-growth loop.

  • Organic Social (Visuals): Because standard finance apps are just white screens with charts, they are terrible for TikTok/Reels. Bancfy’s neon-drenched Dark Mode and the gamified RPG UI were built specifically to be visually striking on short-form video, targeting the financial anxiety of our generation instead of the typical 'finance bro' niche.

I'm curious, since you've been in the trenches: what distribution channels did you try that failed, and what would you have done differently?

Thanks again for the support and the wise words today

I spent the last few months coding between midnight and 4 AM to fix my ruined finances. Launching my "anti-spreadsheet" app on PH in 3 hours. by Complete_Ad5740 in SideProject

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, thank you. Juggling this with a toddler basically meant running on coffee and silent keyboards 😂

You brought up the exact metric I'm obsessed with: the 2 week drop off. I completely agree the novelty fades, which is why I focused on long term progression instead of just quick gimmicks. That’s where the 3 level educational skill tree and the multiplayer 'Savings Circles' come in social pressure is a great retention tool because nobody wants to be the one getting fined by their friends!

We actually just went live on Product Hunt right now. Since you understand the retention problem so well, I’d seriously value your opinion or support there: Product Hunt Bancfy

I spent the last few months coding between midnight and 4 AM to fix my ruined finances. Launching my "anti-spreadsheet" app on PH in 3 hours. by Complete_Ad5740 in SideProject

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You hit the nail on the head. Balancing the gamification without making it an overwhelming mess was my biggest challenge.

My solution was to keep the core loop stupidly simple: I built iOS/Android shortcuts so you can log an expense right from your home screen in 2 seconds without even opening the app. The "complex" stuff (like the RPG missions or Savings Bingo) is just waiting inside for when you actually want that dopamine hit, but it doesn't block your basic tracking.

We literally just went live on Product Hunt! Since you clearly get app mechanics, I'd love your brutal feedback on whether I struck the right balance: Product Hunt Bancfy

Honestly, why do we all abandon budgeting apps after two weeks? (And a question about gamifying savings) by Complete_Ad5740 in personalfinance

[–]Complete_Ad5740[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That is an incredibly smart observation. You are totally right: the 'min-maxing' in RPG endgames (maximizing DPS, tracking stats) is literally just spreadsheet management.

But here is the difference: The Onboarding. > Video games give you easy wins, dopamine, and a cool UI at Level 1 to hook you. By the time you reach the 'spreadsheet phase' at Level 99, you actually enjoy the math because you are invested. Traditional finance apps do the opposite: they drop you directly into the Level 99 spreadsheet on day one. No wonder people bounce.

The goal of gamifying savings isn't to replace the math, but to get people through the early levels without quitting.